Well, Nasa has now released a video in which it explains how the picture was taken.

Their response? 'Nope'.

Put simply, it's a composite of 55 images taken via a seven-foot long robotic arm, with the arm painted out with data from other pictures.

"There weren't that many images with the arm in them because of how we positioned the arm," Michael Ravine of Malin Space Systems, who built the camera, told National Geographic.

"It's like if you hold a camera out in front of you with your elbow crooked and shoot--what you'll probably get is your face and top of your body including your shoulder, but most of your arm is out of the frame."

The rover is now moving towards an area of Mars known as Yellowknife Bay, where it hopes to find evidence of life having once existed on the planet.